Category Archives: Scottish, Gaelic, Irish Celtic events and stories

Todd Wong getting ready for “Battle of the Bards”



Somehow this 5th generation Chinese-Canadian who has never set foot in Scotland is becoming a  go-to guy for Gaelic and Celtic culture in Vancouver? 

It took me by complete surprise when Steve Duncan initially asked me to play Robert Burns in a literary poetry slam for Celtic Fest Vancouver, based on the “Battle of the Bards” originally done in Dublin.

Steve wrote on his blog Commerical Drive – Live!,

Every year I put on some type of literary event for the festival. This year it's The Battle of the Bards Pub Crawl. A cross between Dublin's world-famous literary Pub Crawl, and the phenomenally popular Poetry Slam (which makes it's home right here on the Drive at Cafe Deux Soliels every Monday and produces consistently top spoken word artists.

For this event, hosted by the lovely Ravishing Rhonda, Dylan Thomas, W.B Yeats and Robbie Burns (played masterfully by Damon Calderwood, Mark Downey and Todd Wong – of Gung Haggis Fat Choy fame)
go head-to-head in a poetry face-off at 3 different venues and are
judged by members of the audience the grand finale is a karaoke battle
at Ceili's Pub, with a live DJ (local spinmaster
Michael Louw) and celtic fiddler Elise Bloer.

Och!  And explorer Simon Fraser was born in Vernont to Loyalist parents, and he never set foot in Scotland either!

The “Battle of The Bards” event is catching a buzz in Vancouver poetry and performance circles now.  Professional actors are playing poets Dylan Thomas and William Butler Yeats.  But Robbie Burns is being played by cultural activist Todd Wong aka “Toddish McWong.” 

Todd Wong (me) is not a professional actor, despite taking some acting classes at Capilano College.  I think I am at a disadvantage by being culturally challenged not having grown up with an Ayreshire accent, as well as being alcohol absorption challenged because of the Chinese DNA.  How will I survive this literary pub crawl?  But I hope to have a few surprises in store.

I can't reveal details of these surprises or upcoming articles in the media… so please stay tuned.  They are each different in subject matter and direction… both each were fascinating chats, and both wanted new pictures of Toddish McWong in action around Vancouver….  more details later.

Toddish McWong to appear as Robbie Burns in “Battle of the Bards” literary pub crawl

The word is out.  Scotland's favorite poet son, will be represented in Vancouver CelticFest's Battle of the Bards by 5th generation Chinese Canadian Todd Wong aka Toddish McWong – creator of Gung Haggis Fat Choy Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner, and other intercultural events.

Wong first participated in Celtic Fest's first St. Patrick's Day parade, when he put a Taiwanese dragon boat on a trailer and towed it down the street in the parade.  Seated in the boat were bagpiper Joe McDonald, and guitarist Andrew Kim, the Brave Waves.

Both McDonald and Kim were also featured in the CBC Vancouver television performance special Gung Haggis Fat Choy – another spin off from the Todd Wong creative braintrust.


View Clip

Check out official CelticFest promotional blurbs from event organizer and poet Stephen Duncan
http://www.poetryradio.blogspot.com/

With CelticFest and St. Paddy's day fast upon us, we decided a tribute
to the Scotch and Irish would be appropriate, so we are raising the
dead for this show and bringing in William Butler Yeats and Robbie Burns to help celebrate.
Yeats and Burns (really two great performers, Mark Downey and Todd Wong) will be going head-to-head, along with Dylan Thomas in a unique literary event this year on Thursday, March 13: The Battle of the Bards Literary Pub Crawl, a
combination pub crawl/poetry slam where the legendary poets go from pub
to pub downtown performing their works and being judged by members of
the audience armed with scorecards. The event culminates in a Jack Karaoke-style match at Ceili's Pub, where they must do their pieces accompanied by a DJ (All Purpose's Michael Louw) and fiddler Elise Boeur. Once the contest is over much drinking and dancing is done into the wee hours.

Click on the image below for more details.

Ron MacLeod Report Feb 29: a ceilidh, a TV program, Isle of Eigg and Talisker whisky.

Ron MacLeod is Scots Chair V at the Centre for Scottish Studies at Simon Fraser University.  Here is his latest report featuring one of my favorite single malt scotch whiskey

Greetings, a message about a ceilidh, a TV program, Isle of Eigg and whisky.  Regards, the other Ron

 
1.  Ceilidh
What: Gaelic Society’s next ceilidh
Where: Scottish Cultural Centre, 8886 Hudson (at 73rd Ave), Vancouver,B.C.
When: Saturday, March 1st, 2008
Time:  8:00 PM
 Other: small door fee; entertainment, munchies, some dancing.
All welcome
 

2. The following courtesy Angus MacIssaac. A short movie entitled “The Wake of Calum MacLeod” will be shown on Bravo television at 4:30 P.M., Friday, February 29th. The movie was made in Cape Breton so should have a great dollop of Highland realism.

 3. Life will never be the same on the island of Eigg again, and in this respect it can only be a good thing.  Islanders have at last joined the 21st Century and will now be able to enjoy the little things we take for completely for granted.  No
doubt there will be a rush of electrical equipment being delivered to
the island; appliances which the residents have not been able to use
previously because their power was provided by expensive diesel
generators and gas bottles.
 

The
Isle of Eigg Electrification Project switched on for the first time on
1st February 2008, allowing power generated from renewable energy
sources around the island to be supplied to all residents, through the
new island-wide high voltage distribution network. 
The
system will generate over 95% of the island’s annual energy demand
through a combination of Hydro Electric, Wind Power and Solar Energy,
which is believed to be the first time that anyone has successfully
integrated these three renewable energy sources. To ensure that
constant power can be provided, a battery storage system has been
designed which will compensate for short periods where energy from
renewable sources is not available. Two diesel generators have also
been installed to provide emergency back-up power, and to supplement
the supply should the output from the renewable sources be lower than
the demand.

 

4. Talisker Distillery in Skye is
looking forward to increased interest from connoisseurs around the
globe after one of its products was named “the world’s best single malt
whisky” in the industry’s most prestigious awards event.

It
was Talisker 18 Years Old that took the fancy of the judging panel —
and the supreme title for the first time — in Whisky Magazine’s 2007
Awards. A spokesman for Diageo, the distillery’s owners, said that
demand for Talisker was expected to rise sharply as a result.
  The
award coincides with the retirement of Charlie Smith, manager at
Talisker for the past three years, following a distinguished career in
the whisky industry. Mr Smith was also manager at Dufftown, Cardhu and
Glenkinchie distilleries.

He
is succeeded by Willie MacDougal, a native of Aberfeldy who was site
operations manager at Oban Distillery for six years prior to a brief
spell at Blair Athol. His family has a long association with the
industry and Mr MacDougal says he is “totally thrilled” to be taking
over at one of the world’s most famous distilleries.
  “Talisker
is one of the most successful malts in the world,” said Mr MacDougal,
“though — or maybe because — the distillery’s output is deliberately a
good deal lower than some other top-selling malts. It’s a distillery
with massive heritage and an amazing future, with fans all over the
world.” He added that he also intended to improve his piping skills
while on Skye.
  The
Whisky Magazine judging panel’s comments on Talisker 18 Years Old fully
endorsed Mr MacDougal’s enthusiasm for the brand. Dave Broom, one of
the world’s leading whisky commentators, described it as “elegant with
fascinating balance between smoke and subtle sweet fruit. Ever changing
in the glass and on the palate.”

Edinburgh whisky dealer Keir Sword waxed even more eloquent:

“Warm,
rich and attractive. Leather, pipe-tobacco, sweet sherry and polished
oak on the nose, followed by a good creamy texture and a warming
finish. A very attractive

Eric on the Road podcast with Gung Haggis Fat Choy – hitting US pod cast waves

Back in January, Todd Wong was interviewed by Eric Model for “Conversations on the Road.”  Model describes his  show as “journeys into the offbeat, off the beaten path, overlooked and the forgotten.”

“And today most appropriately takes us into the category of offbeat.  And today's journey we go to Vancouver and we are discussing and event called 'Gung Haggis Fat Choy.'”

It's a very interesting 21 minute and 38 second pod cast with a stimulating conversation about the origins of Gung Haggis Fat Choy, early Chinese and Scottish pioneers in the late 1800's, racism, cultural traditions, inter-racial marriage, and the Canadian explorer Simon Fraser who was actually born in Vermont.

Wednesday, January 30, 2008

Gung Haggis Fat Choy – A Unique Scottish-Chinese Cultural Celebration

Posted by: emodel // Category: Uncategorized // 8:15 am

Gung
Haggis Fat Choy is a cultural event originating from Vancouver, BC. The
name Gung Haggis Fat Choy is a combination wordplay on Scottish and
Chinese words: haggis is a traditional Scottish food and Gung Hay Fat
Choy/Kung Hei Fat Choi s a traditional Cantonese greeting (in Mandarin
it is pronounced Gong Xi Fa Cai) used during Chinese New Year. The
event originated to mark the timely coincidence of the Scottish
cultural celebration of Robert Burns Day (January 25) with the Chinese
New Year, but has come to represent a celebration of combining cultures
in untraditional ways.

In Vancouver, the event is characterized by music, poetry, and other
performances around the city, culminating in a large banquet and party.
This unique event has also inspired both a television performance
special titled Gung Haggis Fat Choy, and the Gung Haggis Fat Choy
Canadian Games, organized by the Recreation Department at Simon Fraser
University.

In this conversation, we speak with event founder and spearhead Todd
Wong. He tells us how it got started, and what it has come to represent
around Vancouver and far beyond. 

icon for podpress  Gung Haggis Fat Choy [21:38m]:  Download

Gung Haggis Fat Choy in Province Newspaper today for Chinese New Year

Happy Chinese New Year – Gung Hay Fat Choy!

…or should that be Gung Haggis Fat Choy ?

Province
Newspaper reporter Cheryl Chan interviewed me about the multiculturalism of Chinese Lunar
New Year, and about my recent Gung Haggis Fat Choy Robbie Burns Chinese
New Year dinner.  I told her about how I have been asked to speak at Elementary schools to help them express the Lunar New Year as a multicultural event, that all cultures can share in – not just Chinese New Year, Tibetan Losar, or Vietnamese Tet celebrations.

Gee… like everybody can be Irish for St. Patrick's Day, or everybody
can be Scottish for Robbie Burns Day, or all Canadians can celebrate
Chinese New Year…. definitely!!!

Then she asked what I was up to for Chinese New Year's Day…  I told her going to see Banana Boys Play… and Kilts Night at Doolin's Irish Pub. The writer included it in a list of events for Chinese New Year.

But darn… she didn't use any of my quotes about inter-culturalism expressed in a dragon boat team!

I am going to spend some time with my Hapa-Canadian niece and nephew today, then go see bagpiper friend Joe McDonald, who has survived 9 Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinners, and a dragboat float in the 1st Vancouver St. Patrick's Day parade. 

Some of our Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team members and Kilts Night clan will be having Chinese New Year dinner at Hon's before they head over to Doolin's Irish Pub, Nelson and Granville for Kilts Night and to watch the hockey game before the Halifax Wharf Rats start playing.   I am going to see the 7:30pm Banana Boys show at the Firehall Arts Centre- but should make Kilts Night around 9:30 to 10pm. 

Slainte, Todd

Chinese New Year joins Canadian mainstream

Communities come together in parade

Cheryl Chan, The Province

Published: Thursday, February 07, 2008

The Year of the Rat kicks off today — not with a squeak but with a mighty cross-cultural roar.
Chinese
New Year, the most important holiday on the Chinese lunar calendar, has
become a reason for many Canadians, including those of non-Chinese
heritage, to eat, drink and make merry.
“It's becoming, in
that great way, a Canadian tradition,” said Todd Wong, a
fifth-generation Chinese-Canadian. “It's for all cultures to celebrate,
not just Chinese or Asians.”
Join the Rat Pack: It'll be a good year for Rats, especially if you're looking for a job. Roosters? Well, you could be facing problems.Sherman Tai predicts the year ahead, B6-7 n The changing taste of Chinese food, B8-9View Larger Image View Larger Image

Join
the Rat Pack: It'll be a good year for Rats, especially if you're
looking for a job. Roosters? Well, you could be facing problems.Sherman
Tai predicts the year ahead, B6-7 n The changing taste of Chinese food,
B8-9

Illustration, Nick Murphy — the Province

More pictures:


Wong,
47, recently hosted Gung Haggis Fat Choy, an annual salute to Chinese
New Year and Robbie Burns Day, where bagpipes serenaded banquet diners
munching on hybrid delicacies such as a haggis lettuce wrap.
He
said Chinese New Year's popularity is due not only to the large number
of Chinese immigrants but the interracial friendships and marriages
that have introduced the family-oriented holiday to mainstream
Canadians.
“There's a heck of a
lot of white people out there learning about Chinese New Year because
their grandkids are half-Chinese,” said Wong, whose maternal cousins
all married non-Chinese.
Even
traditional offerings have taken on a cross-cultural flavour. The
annual Chinese New Year parade, expected to draw more than 600,000
spectators from across Metro Vancouver, is an example of
multiculturalism at work.
More
than 2,000 participants, including bhangra dancers, marching bands,
bagpipers, traditional dragon- and lion-dance teams and a unicorn-dance
team, will make their way on foot and floats through Chinatown starting
at the Millennium Gate at noon on Sunday.
“At
the parade, you see multiculturalism when the fabric of communities in
Vancouver come together,” said Kenneth Tung, head of Success, one of
the event's organizers.
“It's a multicultural
parade in a culture-specific setting,” adds Wong, who says he'll be attending the festivities.
Other celebrations:
– Thursday: The Vancouver Police Department's lion-dance team performs at Vancouver City Hall at noon.
– Thursday night: Kilts Night at Doolin's Irish Pub. Free pint of Guinness if you wear a kilt.
– Friday through Sunday: Chinese New Year celebration at International Village, 88 West Pender St.

Vancouver Irish-Indo fusion music: Delhi2Dublin releases cd

Delhi2Dublin is having a cd release party!

Thursday December 13th, doors 9pm
The Red Room (398 Richards)

If you have ever seen spritely violinist Kytami perform with Delhi2Dublin's tabla drums and hip hop turntables – then you already now how much fun this Vancouver secret is!

I can say that I loved this group at their very first event for Vancouver's Celtic Fest.
Here's my review of that first event St. Paddy's Eve in Vancouver – What is a man in a kilt to do?

Organizer Tarun Nayar has set up a wonderful cd release party tonight.  He writes:

It should be a ridiculously good time. Come
check out this global fusion band, with a host of special guests, DJs
and dancers (http://www.delhi2dublin.com).
If you absolutely can't make the party tomorrow, CDs are now available
at Highlife, and will soon be available on line. A perfect x-mas gift
for those bhangra loving leprechauns in your life…

————————————————————————————

Beats Without Borders + A-Town
in association with Turner Music present:

The Delhi 2 Dublin CD Release Party

Thursday December 13th, doors 9pm
The Red Room (398 Richards)
tix 10$ advance @ Highlife, Zulu, Kamal; 15$ @ the door

http://www.beatswithoutborders.com

Bagpipes and Taiko drums… Look out for Uzume Taiko & Mearingstone Nov 23

Four bagpipers… four taiko drums… What could possibly happen?

I have seen Uzume Taiko perform with one bagpiper before.  When we were creating the CBC “Gung Haggis Fat Choy” television performance special, one of my ideas was to have a helicopter shoot of Burnaby Mountain with the SFU Bagpipe Band playing with the Uzume Taiko band.  But the show had a small budget, and the producer decided to keep the cultural fusion between Chinese and Scottish musicians. So, our culture-clash-fusion happened in the Dr. Sun Yat Sen Gardens where Chinese flute player Jian Ming Pan bumped into the celtic band The Paperboys, accompanied by bagpiper Tim Fanning.

Uzume Taiko & Mearingstone's performance together should be a musically adventurous evening.  I am looking forward to it.  There is a long history of Japanese-Canadians and Scottish-Canadians mixing in Vancouver.  I have seen a picture of a little Japanese girl dressed up in kilt circa 1923.  Ron Macleod, Chair of SFU Scottish Studies program, tells me that he knew many Japanese-Canadians growing up in Tofino.  But then they disappeared in the 1942 internment.

Taiko drums and bagpipes?  Very Vancouver!

An Uzume Taiko Drum
Group Society presentation:


Uzume Taiko
& Mearingstone


Friday,
November 23, 2007 / 8:00pm


Norman Rothstein Theatre, 950 West 41st Avenue


************************************************************************************
Uzume_Mearingstone_Nov23_ecard.jpg

On Friday, November 23, two
amazing musical ensembles, Mearingstone and Uzume Taiko,
and guest shakuhachi and didgeridoo musician Alcvin Ramos, come
together in this concert at the Rothstein to perform individually and
collaboratively. This spectacular program, featuring highland pipes,
taiko drums, percussion, melodic instruments and choreographed movement,
will make for a mesmerizing evening played with passion and grace ­
guaranteed to stir emotions!


 


Mearingstone, a Vancouver-based ensemble of four highland pipers,
concocts an intense, formally intricate music, a world music analogue of
the Philip Glass Ensemble or Bang On a Can’s explorations of musical
density, variation, time, and ecstasy. Formed in 1988 to perform Michael
O’Neill’s Ur Og and Aji, Mearingstone is often augmented by other
instruments ­such as Japanese taiko and shakuhachi, Indian tabla, bass
clarinet, or even…pipe band drums. Mearingstone members are Sylvia
DeTar, Micah Babinski, Damien Burleigh
, and Michael O'Neill.
Together, within the apparently restricted expressive range of the
bagpipes, they bring forth a wide variety of moods ­ the results of a
passionate response to the unrealized potential of a deep tradition.


 


“…sheer sonic power of the four bagpipes …” Georgia
Straight


 


Since 1988, Uzume Taiko (Bonnie Soon, Jason Overy, Boyd Seiichi
Grealy, Naomi Kajiwara
, all on taiko and percussion) has enthralled
audiences at festivals, schools, concerts and special events across
Canada, the United States, Europe and Japan with its dynamic synthesis of
music, movement and theatre. Using a diverse collection of percussive and
melodic instruments as well as taiko drums, Uzume Taiko has developed a
dynamic fusion of old and new styles of drumming ­ bringing a vibrant,
contemporary sensibility to an ancient art. With the choreographed
physicality of martial arts, the heart-stopping pulse of the O-Daiko and
the rhythmic sensitivity of a jazz ensemble, the drummers of Uzume Taiko
create an exhilarating sensual experience.


 


[Uzume Taiko is] One of the most remarkable percussion ensembles ever to
hit the UK …


hugely inventive, ingenious and dangerously mesmerizing. Press and
Journal, Scotland


Diane Kadota Arts Management

tel: 604.683.8240 / fax: 604.683.7911


Mailing Address:

Suite 310 – 425 Carrall Street
Vancouver, BC V6B 6E3

Street/Courier Address:

Suite 310 – 23 West Pender Street
Vancouver, BC  V6B 1R3

www.dkam.ca

Salute to the Veterans by 78th Fraser Highlanders at BC Place Nov 3rd, during the BC Lions half-time show

Salute to the Veterans by 78th Fraser Highlanders at BC Place Nov 3rd, during the BC Lions half-time show


image

Musket smoke flares in BC Place, as the 78th Fraser Highlanders honour guard fires a “Salute to the Veterans” – courtesy photo by Vincent Chan at www.invisionation.com 

Guns, muskets firing, marching men in kilts, veterans and Remembrance Day ceremonies and beer in a football stadium… what could be better?

I have never been to a military tatoo at Edinburgh Castle, but after watching the video of the 78th Fraser Highlanders “Salute to the Veterans” at BC Place, during the Nov. 3rd BC Lions half-time show… and feeling the stirring sounds of bagpipes… I could well imagine.  I shoulda been there!!!

Maybe if I buy a new Roland electronic accordion with MIDI bagpipe simulations – I could join the 78th Fraser Highlanders.  Except my kilts are the Ancient Fraser of Lovat and the modern Fraser Hunting Tartan.

My friend Louise Lindgard, Vol. Sgt with the 78th Fraser Highlanders sent me the following account:

“The 78th Fraser Highlanders
participated last Saturday (Nov. 3, 2007) in the BC Lions Salute to the Veterans
which was held during the half-time show at BC Place Stadium.  The
half-time show was a tribute to our veterans and serving Canadian Forces
personnel.

The Hon. Greg Thompson, Minister of Veterans Affairs,
joined 1,000 people (veterans, cadets, Canadian Forces personnel, massed bands,
pipes and drums) to march on the field at half-time for a performance honouring
our veterans and Canadian Forces personnel.  The cadets unfolded a giant
Canadian flag and veterans who were unable to march were driven onto the field
in vintage cars.”

The attached video was made predominantly for the 78th Fraser
Highlanders as a promotional video as our Honour Guard fired some musket
volleys during the performance, which is always a crowd-pleaser.  Please
feel free to include it if you think it is appropriate and, if so, please give
credit to Paul Keenleyside as he shot the video.  Thanks.

The video
by Paul Keenleyside can be viewed at the following link:

http://www.thefraserhighlanders.com/video/video_1.htm

I also attach four photos
of the 78th Fraser Highlanders courtesy of Vincent Chan at www.invisionation.com – so please
also include his name and website in the credits for the photos, if you use
them.

Louise Lindgard

Vol. Sgt. – 78th Fraser Highlanders

Fort Fraser Garrison

Bagpipes and drums Knockout competition this Friday Nov 9th, at Scottish Cultural Centre

Bagpipes and drums  Knockout competition this Friday Nov 9th, at Scottish Cultural Centre

Imagine bagpipes and drums playing a game of survivor.  Going against each other in immunity elimination challenges, until only one bagpiper and one drummer are left standing.

This information comes to me from Ron Macleod, Chair of the SFU Scottish Cultural Studies Program.

Greetings, the following will be of interest to those who enjoy piping.

Courtesy of Ed McIlwaine, President, BC Pipers' Association. Regards, the other Ron

 The BC Pipers' Association is again presenting a series of piping and drumming knockout competitions. These competitions, through a process of elimination, culminate in a final round at the Association’s Annual Dinner which is usually held the second Saturday in March.

 WHAT: BC Pipers’ Knockout event.

WHERE: Scottish Cultural Centre, 8886 Hudson (at 73rd Avenue), Vancouver.

WHEN: Friday, November 9th. Doors open at 6:30 PM; piping and drumming events start at 7:30 PM.

WHO: 9 pipers and 4 drummers will compete

COST: Members $6.00 and non-members $8.00

CONTACT: Ed McIlwaine at edward@cantrawl.com

OTHER:

Come and enjoy a dram or a beer and hear some first rate pipers and drummers at work!

The second round of the Knockout will be held on Friday, December 14th, same venue, different players.

For anyone traveling from South-East of the Port Mann Bridge, I suggest that you consider cutting across Surrey in some appropriate way and taking the Alex Fraser Bridge, the 91 and 99 over the Oak St. Bridge.

Theatre Review: The Dunsmuirs is a well-acted immigrant rags-to-riches story with a healthy dose of Scots-Canadian culture

Theatre Review:  The Dunsmuirs is a well-acted immigrant rags-to-riches story with a healthy dose of Scots-Canadian culture

The Dunsmuirs: Alone at the Edge
Oct 5-20, 2007
Presentation House Theatre
333 Chesterfield Ave.
North Vancouver

photo of Duncan Fraser by Sandra Lockwood

This is a wonderfully
interesting play about one of Canada's most controversial and
rags-to-richest Scots-Canadian Robert Dunsmuir.  The coal miner who
became a coal baron then Premier and Lt. Governor of the province while
he was employing Asian minors as lower paid scab labourers in his
Nanaimo/Cumberland mines.

Written by Rod Langley and directed by Bill Devine.  Duncan Fraser stars as the ambitious Robert Dunsmuir who excels at the Scots work ethic to the point of distressing his long suffering wife Joan Dunsmuir played by Lee Van
Paassen. Both Fraser and Van Paassen present strong acting as their characters must go through tremendous trials in both family and business. 

The story is centered on the family's life in the 1860's when both Dunsmuir and his son James, played by Mike Wasco, both work in the mine pits.  His other son Alex (played by Daniel Arnold) works in the office, where he has plenty of time to develop his dependency for alcohol.  Cat Main plays Susan, the town school teacher who becomes the girlfriend of James.

One night, Joan and her sons plot an attempt to halt Dunsmuir's obsession with working in the mines, when he suddenly walks in with a large discovery of a new coal vein which changes their lives forever.  The play is dark with ambition, greed and jealousy as well as insercurity.  It is revealed that the Dunsmuirs have never been liked or accepted by the community.  But this changes as the family fortunes rise.

The second act finds the Dunsmuirs as an accepted family in society.  Robert is to be a special guest at the annual community Robert Burns Dinner.  Fraser walks up to the audience and delivers his speech to the audience, as if they were attendees to the dinner.  While there is canned clapping heard through the sound system, the audience began clapping spontaneously along in all the right moments adding to a lively interaction between actor and audience.

“It was a good audience tonight,” actor Duncan Fraser later told me after the show.

Set designers Gary and Lynda Chu do a wonderful job for such a small theatre.  The main stage is a realistic yet sparse cabin home of the Dunsmuirs.  For scenes such as going to the office of Commander Diggle (played admirably by William Samples), or the Burns Dinner, the main stage lights are turned down and the actors come to the side or the front of the stage.  It is effective and simple, and puts all the attention on the skills of the actors.

The Dunsmuirs gives a
very interesting look at an important part of BC and Canadian history. 
While it stops short of Robert Dunsmuir's rise to become BC's first
millionaire, his turns as BC Premier and Lt. Governor, and before he employed Asian miners as scab labourers – the play also
reveals his ruthless business acumen, that broke strikes and made him
the scourage of labour in BC. 

Click here to see an interview with cast members.

Check out other reviews on The Dunsmuirs:

The Dunsmuirs: alone at the edge
Georgia Straight, Canada – 11 Oct 2007
As Dunsmuir, Duncan Fraser is a notable exception. His performance is as subtle and monumental as the script aspires to be.
The bitter making of a coal baron
Vancouver Sun,  Canada – 10 Oct 2007
Duncan Fraser plays Robert Dunsmuir, impoverished patriarch, and Fraser's wife Lee Van Paassen portrays Robert's missus Joan. While the Dunsmuirs' son James
Ruthless coal baron lived a dark life
Vancouver Sun,  Canada – 4 Oct 2007
A new Sea Theatre production opening this weekend features Duncan Fraser and Lee van Paassen as the Dunsmuirs, and this isn't the first time these actors



Todd's adventures at “The Dunsmuirs” – wearing a kilt and meeting the actors.

It was interesting to go see a play about Robert Dunsmuir, one of BC's leading historical strike breakers ,picket line crossers, and employer of scab labour – while my own Vancouver Library workers union was on the 82nd strike day of the first strike in it's 77 year history of the CUPE 391 union.  But then it is always more interesting when I decide to wear a kilt to a Scots theme-related event.

At intermission, my friend and I each enjoyed a bottle of Alexander Keith's. I was wearing the
Fraser Hunting tartan wool kilt – because in a photo of the play, I
noticed that the actor playing Robert Dunsmuir, Duncan Fraser, was
wearing the same cloth.  Needless to say, several people stared, and
commented to themselves about the “Chinese guy wearing a kilt.”  One
fellow came up to me as we walked back into the theatre, saying he saw
me in a theatre show. 

“Not me,” I replied… “but maybe you saw me on television.  On the CBC documentary Generations: The Chan Legacy?”

The show was good, as it dramatically showed the challenging family
dynamics of the Dunsmuir family, in their quest to develop and maintain
the coal mine.  Rising from a dirt poor mining family, you learn about
Mrs. Dunsmuir's fall from grace with her family in Scotland, and how
she was the spunk that pushed Robert Dunsmuir to succeed in his dreams.

After the show, the actor that played Dunsmuir's son James walked by. 
I asked him if William Samples was still there.  He said yes (Samples
leaves at PAL “Performing Arts Lodge” where Deb works).  I asked him to
say that “Deb Martin says hi” and to tell actor Duncan Fraser… that I
was wearing the hunting Fraser tartan.

The actors came out, and we made introductions.  Fraser looked at my
kilt and said a line from the play, “We are clan!”  We had a good chat
about Gung Haggis Fat Choy, Robbie Burns, Robert Dunsmuir. 

I showed my card to Samples and Fraser, and they hooted at the picture of me wearing a kilt with the Chinese Lion mask.

“If you ever need somebody to give the Address to the Haggis, I'd be delighted.” he offered.

I shared that my great-great-grandfather Rev. Chan Yu Tan used to minister to the Chinese miners in Nanaimo and Cumberland.

“You can't say the name Dunsmuir, in Nanaimo.  The man is that reviled there,” said Fraser.

IMG_0221


Actors William Samples and Duncan Fraser force Todd Wong to prove he
has enough hot air to fill Fraser's bagpipes- photo Dave Samis

We took some pictures with William Samples and Duncan Fraser on the set.  Duncan went to get his bagpipes, and put them in my hands telling me to blow into them.  Samples kept telling me jokes in an effort to get me to laugh and lose my breath while blowing.

I promised to try to get an invitation for Duncan Fraser to the dinner
for the visiting Scottish parliamentary ministers coming up in
November, as Harry McGrath has been asking me – a 5th generation
Chinese-Canadian, for worthy examples of Scottish-Canadian citizenry to
invite as guests.

See Todd's photos from his August 2007 visit to Craigdarroch Castle:

Scottish Victoria + Craigdarroch Castle…

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